Bangkok Post

Rebels ‘killed’ 200 Amharas

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KIGALI: An Ethiopian rebel group massacred more than 200 members of the Amhara ethnic group on Sunday, according to officials and news reports, the latest atrocity amid a civil war that threatens to tear apart Africa’s secondmost-populous nation.

Witnesses and officials told The Associated Press that at least 230 people were killed when members of the Oromo Liberation Army attacked Tole, a village in Oromia, Ethiopia’s largest region.

The Oromo Liberation Army, a rebel group known as the OLA that is designated as a terror organisati­on by the Ethiopian government, denied carrying out the killings and said they were committed by a militia aligned with the regional government supporting Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed.

The attack was among the worst ethnic violence to roil the country since November 2020 when the government and its allies began trying to suppress a rebellion that began in the northern region of Tigray.

The Tigrayans, an ethnic minority that long held outsized political power in the country, revolted against efforts by Mr Abiy to do away with the country’s system of ethnic federalism.

The conflict soon exploded into a civil war, cleaving the country along ethnic lines and leaving thousands dead and injured and millions hungry and displaced. Fighters on both sides of the conflict have committed war crimes, including ethnic cleansing, mass killings and sexual violence.

As the war has dragged on, human rights groups have documented various transgress­ions — including extrajudic­ial killings and attacks on refugees — that have been carried out by both government forces and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front.

“The Abiy regime is again blaming the OLA for atrocities committed by its own retreating fighters,” Odaa Tarbii, internatio­nal spokespers­on for the rebels, tweeted. The OLA, which joined forces with the Tigrayans against the government, has previously been accused of targeting civilians and government officials.

The Oromia regional government held the OLA responsibl­e, too, saying in a statement that the group “killed people and destroyed property” because it “couldn’t withstand the operations launched against it by security forces”.

In late March, Ethiopia’s government announced a “humanitari­an truce” in Tigray, just weeks after it lifted the state of emergency provisions that were used to round up people of Tigrayan descent.

But there have been few concrete steps toward ending the conflict in the landlocked nation of 115 million people.

Mr Abiy has also faced challenges consolidat­ing power among myriad ethnic groups. This has particular­ly been true of the Amharas, who are the country’s second-largest ethnic group.

In recent weeks, authoritie­s have arrested thousands of people in the Amhara region, including members of the Fano militia who were instrument­al in helping Mr Abiy fight the war in Tigray. On Tuesday, Mr Abiy announced the establishm­ent of a committee to negotiate peace with the Tigrayans.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Oromia Special Forces check a man dressed in traditiona­l clothing during a festival in the Oromia region of Ethiopia in 2020.
REUTERS Oromia Special Forces check a man dressed in traditiona­l clothing during a festival in the Oromia region of Ethiopia in 2020.

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